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Warner Music Group has signed a long-term licensing deal with MQA. The agreement, which is the first between the new High Res Audio codec company and any major music company, should significantly increase the amount of music available in the format. The agreement paves the way for recordings from Warner’s expansive catalogue to be made available in studio master quality files. - See more at: http://www.insideci.co.uk/news/mqa-signs-long-term-licensing-deal-with-warner-music.aspx#sthash.Wb4T0NLI.dpuf
As a consumer, the question is more short term: Is it better than the competition? MOG, Pandora etc..Maybe I have this wrong, but it's not like you have to buy a bunch of hardware to play? Right? And your not locked into a long term contract.It's a fairly inexpensive experiment. Whereas SACD's required a SACD player (interconnects, power cords, etc., etc.) then buying a bunch of SACD's of music you probably already have at $30 bucks a pop. W a sound quality that is hit or miss.
With the new deal with Warner and companies like Pioneer releasing portable MQA players is MQA finally starting to happen.Any one here who actually heard the format? http://www.insideci.co.uk/news/mqa-signs-long-term-licensing-deal-with-warner-music.aspxhttp://www.whathifi.com/news/pioneer-xdp-100r-worlds-first-mqa-ready-hi-res-music-player
Not so fast, buckaroo. Schiit Audio makes some interesting points on this page explaining their non-participation:http://schiit.com/news/news/why-we-wont-be-supporting-mqaNo doubt at least some others have similar positions. MQA seems to be four things: 1) Another attempt to ram DRM down consumers' throats; 2) Another way to get consumers to pay for the same music all over again; 3) A scheme to make file compression more efficient, mostly benefitting streaming services; 4) And an attempt to generate a licensing revenue stream for some entity or entities from every piece of hardware and software involved. Of the four, only #3 seems to potentially benefit the consumer... but This article by Benchmark Audio states that,in a comparison to standard FLAC files, file sizes were actually larger for the MQA file. It also points out that, contrary to widespread assumption, MQA is actually not lossless.Phooey. As of the moment, its an easy 'Pass' for me.
zoom25, read this article by Benchmark Audio and many of your questions will be answered.https://benchmarkmedia.com/blogs/application_notes/163302855-is-mqa-doaScotty
MQA is a money grab, plain and simple. The licensing costs are very high for manufacturers. I see it as just another "better way" that the audio press is trying to push upon us.